It's best to learn the International Phonetic alphabet and use that. Beware, however, that the pronunciation of French has changed considerably since the late 18th Century, so don't use a modern accent to sing old songs.
There are various systems for representing English words in phonetic symbols, such as the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). Each symbol in the IPA represents a specific sound in the word. To convert an English word into phonetic symbols, you would need to use a phonetic dictionary or refer to online resources that provide phonetic transcriptions.
Sure, please provide the word you would like transcribed using phonetic symbols.
NO WAYYY!!! Phonetic alphabets are ones that sound like they are spelled eg. knight (if phonetic) would be spelled nit or nite. The english language is one of the hardest languages.
Phonene is the way a word would be spelled as it would sound, using phonetic symbols as opposed to a graphine, which is a regular spelling of the word.
Phonetic spelling is the representation of speech sounds by specific symbols. It is used to help people pronounce words correctly by providing a guide for the sounds of individual letters or combinations of letters in a word. Phonetic spelling can vary depending on dialects and accents.
You would use the unilateral "alphabet" which consists of 24 phonetic symbols. Just match the closest symbol to each letter of your name.
Do you mean alpha, bravo, charlie?This would be the NATO phonetic letters. See link.Otherwise, alpha and beta are greek symbols, and charlie is a name.
Different societies have different reasons for having symbols, hence, the symbols are different. Tne symbols would be different, anyway, as different societies speak different languages, for the most part.
There is no difference: an alphabet is a kind of phonetic writing, in which the signs stand for sounds. Another kind of phonetic writing is called a syllabary. Both are utterly unlike hieroglyphics and ideograms, which may contain phonetic elements. Some alphabetic languages, English and French, for example, may have changed the way words are pronounced while retaining their old spelling, in which case a truly phonetic spelling would differ from the received spelling (see the International Phonetic Alphabet, or IPA). But that does not make the alphabet any less a phonetic writing system.
No. For a name, you would never mix Katakana with Kanji. (the first two symbols are katakana (phonetic) and the third one is Kanji (Chinese character).
The phonetic spelling of synthroid is "SIN-throid."
That is it right there. The Americanized version would be Boskewitz , or some other phonetic variant.